International Journal of Infectious Diseases (Oct 2021)

Efficacy and safety of pegylated interferon-α2b in moderate COVID-19: a phase 3, randomized, comparator-controlled, open-label study

  • Shashi Bhushan B L,
  • Sunil Wanve,
  • Parshottam Koradia,
  • Vinay Bhomia,
  • Pravin Soni,
  • Sisir Chakraborty,
  • Akash Khobragade,
  • Shashank Joshi,
  • Sanjeev Kumar Mendiratta,
  • Kevin Kumar Kansagra,
  • Anurag Parihar,
  • Sunil Sharma,
  • Jatin Patel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 111
pp. 281 – 287

Abstract

Read online

Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and safety of pegylated interferon alpha-2b (PEG IFN-α2b) administered in conjunction with the standard of care (SOC) in subjects with moderate coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19). Methods: In this study, adult subjects with confirmed moderate COVID-19 were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either PEG IFN-α2b + SOC or SOC alone. The primary endpoint was a two-point improvement in clinical status on Day 11, measured by the World Health Organization's seven-point ordinal scale. Results: Of 250 subjects, 120 were randomized to the PEG IFN-α2b + SOC arm and 130 were randomized to the SOC arm. The results for the PEG IFN + SOC arms vs the SOC arm for the proportion of subjects with a two-point improvement in the seven-point ordinal scale were 80.36% vs 68.18% (P=0.037) on Day 8, 91.60% vs 92.56% (P=0.781) on Day 11, and 94.12% vs 95.93% (P=0.515) on Day 15. There was a time-dependent decrease in the biomarkers in both arms, and no clinically significant changes in laboratory parameters. The safety profile was similar in both arms. Conclusion: PEG IFN-α2b induced early viral clearance, improved the clinical status, and decreased the duration of supplemental oxygen. It provides a viable treatment option and can limit the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2.

Keywords